From Rap to Trap: The Khaliji Migrant Finds his Aesthetic

This article explores the trajectories and artistic productions of Arabic‑speaking hip hop artists of migrant background in the Gulf countries (especially the UAE and Saudi Arabia). More specifically, the article describes the recent emergence of a new hip hop scene led by second‑generation migrants...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mona Kareem
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre Français d’Archéologie et de Sciences Sociales de Sanaa 2021-02-01
Series:Arabian Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/cy/6285
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spelling doaj-6604d8a519734e0d99d020659e66bc822021-04-08T17:38:02ZengCentre Français d’Archéologie et de Sciences Sociales de SanaaArabian Humanities2308-61222021-02-011410.4000/cy.6285From Rap to Trap: The Khaliji Migrant Finds his AestheticMona KareemThis article explores the trajectories and artistic productions of Arabic‑speaking hip hop artists of migrant background in the Gulf countries (especially the UAE and Saudi Arabia). More specifically, the article describes the recent emergence of a new hip hop scene led by second‑generation migrants, whose lyrics appear as more politicized than those of citizen rappers. While these artists face criticism by local audiences on the basis of their foreign origins – often used to delegitimize their position – the article suggests that hip hop provides them with a language to express their specific experiences as migrants– the informal neighborhoods they grew up in; their critical takes on kafīl‑s, the police, and systematic exclusion; or their experiences of unemployment and discrimination. The article further suggests that these very experiences grant their artists the “street credit” that citizen rappers would lack.The article looks both at tracks and videoclips produced by the rappers as well as some of the discourses held about them– in the media and in the comments section of YouTube videos or online forums. It also points toward a number of issues – the question of how ethnicity and social class are mobilized in the lyrical, linguistic, and parodic creativity of the songs, and in controversies and discourses surrounding the artists; the question of state intervention, either through financially co‑opting the cultural industry or through censorship; the question of migrant experiences, that are rarely expressed elsewhere, and how they are made visible through hip hop productions.http://journals.openedition.org/cy/6285Gulf migrantsglobal hip hopArabic hip hopGulf hip hop
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mona Kareem
spellingShingle Mona Kareem
From Rap to Trap: The Khaliji Migrant Finds his Aesthetic
Arabian Humanities
Gulf migrants
global hip hop
Arabic hip hop
Gulf hip hop
author_facet Mona Kareem
author_sort Mona Kareem
title From Rap to Trap: The Khaliji Migrant Finds his Aesthetic
title_short From Rap to Trap: The Khaliji Migrant Finds his Aesthetic
title_full From Rap to Trap: The Khaliji Migrant Finds his Aesthetic
title_fullStr From Rap to Trap: The Khaliji Migrant Finds his Aesthetic
title_full_unstemmed From Rap to Trap: The Khaliji Migrant Finds his Aesthetic
title_sort from rap to trap: the khaliji migrant finds his aesthetic
publisher Centre Français d’Archéologie et de Sciences Sociales de Sanaa
series Arabian Humanities
issn 2308-6122
publishDate 2021-02-01
description This article explores the trajectories and artistic productions of Arabic‑speaking hip hop artists of migrant background in the Gulf countries (especially the UAE and Saudi Arabia). More specifically, the article describes the recent emergence of a new hip hop scene led by second‑generation migrants, whose lyrics appear as more politicized than those of citizen rappers. While these artists face criticism by local audiences on the basis of their foreign origins – often used to delegitimize their position – the article suggests that hip hop provides them with a language to express their specific experiences as migrants– the informal neighborhoods they grew up in; their critical takes on kafīl‑s, the police, and systematic exclusion; or their experiences of unemployment and discrimination. The article further suggests that these very experiences grant their artists the “street credit” that citizen rappers would lack.The article looks both at tracks and videoclips produced by the rappers as well as some of the discourses held about them– in the media and in the comments section of YouTube videos or online forums. It also points toward a number of issues – the question of how ethnicity and social class are mobilized in the lyrical, linguistic, and parodic creativity of the songs, and in controversies and discourses surrounding the artists; the question of state intervention, either through financially co‑opting the cultural industry or through censorship; the question of migrant experiences, that are rarely expressed elsewhere, and how they are made visible through hip hop productions.
topic Gulf migrants
global hip hop
Arabic hip hop
Gulf hip hop
url http://journals.openedition.org/cy/6285
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